The only detective story where I have bothered to read the actual book was Sherlock Holmes.Cthulhu wrote: ↑Tue Nov 01, 2022 7:51 pmYou have quite a similar approach in many detective stories as well, the readers may know who the murderer is, but still enjoy the detective's struggle to catch the evildoer.Bamax wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 9:22 amI think it is better for characters to know more than the reader... but no turning back now in the story.
That way the reader wants to know what they know... and it can surprise the reader.
No reader cares about any character unless they act interesting or do interesting things.... preferably both.
Often Holmes knows things no one else does until he explains it later... I quite enjoyed Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes... he was rather eccentric but highly intelligent and would have been more of a Marty Sue were it not for his addiction to cocaine.
https://www.banyantreatmentcenter.com/2 ... nd-addict/
Despite that he had a strong sense of justice along with boldness and the strength to back it up... there were times it seemed he would be beaten up by a big burly guy but Holmes despite his thin lanky build was surprisingly strong.
Holmes was like Batman before Batman... totally obsessed with his job... indeed all his skills and hobbies were intentionally chosen to aid him in his job.
From martial arts to knowledge of all manner of random things and making disguises.
He was not good at stuff that had nothing to do with or could not aid his work as a detective.
Cocaine was something he used when he was bored... AKA when he had no detective cases to work on... he literally enjoyed his detective work so much that his phrase when excited over a case was often "The game's a foot!"
For Holmes detective work was like a game... fun even. And boredom to him was only escaped by being high on cocaine or doing the dtective work he loved.
In short... Sherlock was interesting because he was a larger than life character with virtually superhuman deduction skills yet with realistic flaws... making him like a demi-god of sorts... both super and human at once.
Tell me... what is it about Emberwing that makes her interesting BESIDES being a member of a race of blue skinned warrior space elf babes?
I am not being mean so please understand that is not my intention.
Because so far as I have seen the only thing that was interesting about Emberwing in the beginning was the nature of her relationships with others and her nervousness as someone put in the Torret chair purely because the actual Torret died in the attack (if I remember correctly).
The central mystery every Loroi and human character is trying to get to the bottom of, but it really has had not done well at making Emberwing interesting.
That one little tidbit about the Loroi spy in the vision showed just enough that made me want to see her more.
Why? She is obviously psonic kinetic, and she also showed some attitude given what she said of the new priestess.
Is that entertaining to watch? Yes.
What is not? Emberwing-in-a-bathtub.
Unless something shocking happens like Alex pranks her acting like like American Psycho (minus actually hurting her of course).
Emberwing is so serious anyway... practically deserves to get pranked lol.